The set-piece has been at the centre of an exchange of pre-match brinkmanship waged by the rival camps leading into Saturday's likely RBS 6 Nations title decider at Twickenham. The first salvo was fired on Thursday by Wales forwards coach Robin McBryde who declared that "Marler definitely needs to scrummage legally, otherwise we will be pointing a finger".

Eddie Jones fired his own salvo, with the England head coach declaring that Wales scrummage "terribly illegally" due to repeatedly pre-engaging.

In the midst of the mind games stands referee Craig Joubert, who will be overseeing his first Test since controversially awarding Australia a last-gasp penalty that was kicked to rob Scotland of a place in the World Cup semi-finals last autumn.

England defence coach Paul Gustard has faith in Joubert's officiating at the scrum and has no concern over Marler's technique.

"Joe has 30-odd caps for his country, has played in a lot of Premiership games and European games," Gustard said. "He hasn't got a problem with his scrummaging. It's one guy saying something to ignite a fire, which people try to pick up on.

"The statistics in the championship prove something completely different - England have the best scrum in the competition. Fact. "Eddie has nailed our view of the Welsh scrum. Our feeling is that Wales pre-engage and are illegal in their set-up. We have the utmost confidence in Craig Joubert refereeing that properly. If that happens then I'm sure we'll come out on top.

"It's pretty obvious for most people watching the game that England have had the most dominant scrum in the championship so far. Joe got three penalties in his favour against Wales in the World Cup. The statistics speak for themselves."